DATA: VACCINE SAFE IN PREGNANCY
Experts call report promising, call for long-term follow-up
One of the largest reports on COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy bolsters evidence that it is safe although the authors say more comprehensive research is needed.
The preliminary results are based on reports from more than 35,000 U.S. women who received either the Moderna or Pfizer shots while pregnant. Their rates of miscarriage, premature births and other complications were comparable to those observed in published reports on pregnant women before the pandemic.
The new evidence from researchers at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
None of the women involved received Johnson & Johnson’s one-shot vaccine, which became available after the study, and is now in limbo as U.S. authorities examine reports of blood clots in a handful of women.
Separately, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine on Tuesday endorsed vaccination in pregnancy, based on evidence it has been evaluating for over a year.
An American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists representative said the CDC report is promising, but that longer-term follow-up is needed. That group has said previously that COVID-19 vaccination should be available to pregnant women and to those who are breastfeeding, and many pregnant U.S. women have chosen to be vaccinated.
Although pregnant women were excluded from studies that led to emergency authorization for the vaccines, evidence showed no harm in women who were unknowingly pregnant when they enrolled.
Dr. Laura Riley, OB-GYN chair at New York’s Weill Cornell Medicine, said the new results are reassuring.
“It is great to have data to share with our patients who continue to weigh the risks and benefits of vaccination,” she said. “They know the potential complications of COVID infection in pregnancy and now there is some safety data in human pregnancies.”